1280 Metaphors for all

As yet, therefore, all was happiness, and prospect of happiness.

Here are all the great, and opulent noble families engaged on one side or the other.

All is joy and peace with him now, however; he looks hopefully forward to the time when PUNCHINELLO shall have attained to his legitimate rank of the Foremost Journal in the Nation.

" We found that all was excitement at the post; double guards had been put on duty, and Captain Parker had all the scouts at his headquarters.

Her captain said he would go anywhere and take anybody, as all he wanted was a harbor.

If we had Phrynicus, Plato, Eupolis, Cratinus, Ameipsias, and so many other celebrated rivals of Aristophanes, of whom all that we can find are a few fragments scattered in Plutarch, Athenaeus, and Suidas, we might compare them with our poet, settle the general scheme, observe the minuter differences, and form a complete notion of their comick stage.

In every other respect each of them is the coequal of the other two, and all are the servants of the American people, without power or right to control or censure each other in the service of their common superior, save only in the manner and to the degree which that superior has prescribed.

Enough has been said to illustrate the character of a remarkable woman, and of those features of ither cheerfulness, her patience, her industry, her devoted affection, her unselfishnesswhich all of us may be the better for studying and imitating.

All I want is one claim where I got room to sling myself.

All which cannot but be a high provocation, for in effect it is to say that he is not the truth, nor worthy to be believed.

Of one house all that was left standing was a slice of the front wall just wide enough to bear a sign reading: "This house is for sale; elegantly furnished."

All that we have left more of this poet, is a Latin Ode to Henry St. John, esq; which is esteemed a master-piece; the stile being pure and elegant, the subject of a mixt nature, resembling the Jublime spirit, and gay facetious humour of Horace.

All that he discovered was the dead body of Alexia.

Over all was the pervading Spring smell of fresh earth, and the distant smoulder of prairie fires.

All that would have been wanting would have been the legality of the tie: and as law never yet made a marriage happy which lacked the elements of bliss, our lawless union need not have missed happiness.

ye must be ruled with scythes, not sceptres, And mow'd down like the grass, else all we reap Is rank abundance and a rotten harvest Of discontents infecting the fair soil, Making a desert of fertility.

By virtue of the latter therefore it must be an energy, and inasmuch as it relates to the whole moral man, it must be exerted in each and all of his constituents or incidents, faculties and tendencies;it must be a total, not a partial; a continuous, not a desultory or occasional energy.

So Christmas comes and finds you yet in Flanders, And all is mud and messiness and sleet, And men have temperatures and horses glanders, And Brigadiers have trouble with their feet, And life is bad for Company-Commanders, And even Thomas's is not so sweet.

All it professed to inculcate was the necessity of wearing an habitual veil before the mind, through which no thought or feeling should ever be discernible.

Nearly all of this account is impudent slander, but Mr. Pope's imputations may have had enough truth in them to sting.

All I could say was just "Bert!"

If we accept the philosophical conclusion that Time has no substantive existence then all that remains is states of consciousness.

I see that all are wanderers, gone astray Each in his own delusions; they are lost In chase of fancied happiness, still wooed And never won; dream after dream ensues,

All is over, rush to the cars, &c. Remarks:first, the pace is at the rate of twenty-four miles an hour; second, the clear old lady, who was only beaten by a length, is long out of her teens; is it not wonderful, and is she not glorious in her defeat?

Just thus is it with our understanding: all that is voluntary in our knowledge is, the employing or withholding any of our FACULTIES from this or that sort of objects, and a more or less accurate survey of them: but, THEY BEING EMPLOYED, OUR WILL HATH NO POWER TO DETERMINE THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE MIND ONE WAY OR ANOTHER; that is done only by the objects themselves, as far as they are clearly discovered.

1280 Metaphors for  all